Steps away, Herald St gallery, a stalwart of the comparatively scrappy East
London gallery scene, inaugurated a pop - up space with loopy paintings by Ida Ekblad.
People love that area, it's the centre of
the London gallery scene, it's near the Royal Academy of Arts.
All the anachronisms were kept to illustrate just how fast paced
the London gallery scene is, some people we interviewed no longer work at the same galleries, and some galleries no longer exist in the same form they did last year.
Not exact matches
Street Art
London delivers the latest street art news, street artist interviews,
galleries and photos from the
London street art
scene..
«National
Gallery,» a meandering trip through the famed
London art institution, has many sublime
scenes - and some tedious ones, too.
National
Gallery (Frederick Wiseman), France / USA North American Premiere Master documentarian Frederick Wiseman (Crazy Horse, At Berkeley) takes the audience behind the
scenes of this
London institution, which is inhabited by masterpieces of Western art from the Middle Ages to the 19th century.
In a nicely written
scene (John Logan, who scripted Coriolanus for Ralph Fiennes, is one of the three credited screenwriters), Bond and the new Q (tousle - haired lad Ben Whishaw), meet on a bench at
London's National
Gallery, facing Turner's The Fighting Temeraire, a seascape of a retired three - masted warship being hauled away for scrap by a steamer.
Buoyancy in Britain: The
London art world heats up with the opening of the Tate Modern and a thriving
gallery scene Michael Glover
Having provided Obaidi with the platform to highlight these artists at the Saatchi
Gallery in
London, START are delighted to offer him the chance to re-present the Qatari art
scene in the context of its homeland as part of START Doha.
Since then, the
gallery has become internationally renowned for its groundbreaking exhibitions and fostering of the contemporary art
scene in
London.
This exhibition alone reconnects us to the First Paris Biennale in 1959, New
London Situation, at the New
London Gallery in 1961, the British Pavilion of the XXXIII Venice Biennale in 1966, his retrospective at the Tate
Gallery in 1973, and The Sixties Art
Scene in
London, at the Barbican Art Centre in 1993.
FAD will be showcasing
galleries that have made a significant contribution to the growing and diverse art
scene that exists within
London.
CHELSEA SPACE Lynda Morris: Dear Lynda 04 July — 04 August 2012 The personal archive — part scrapbook part record of her extraordinary career at the centre of the
London scene in the 60's through to her time as curator at the Norwich
Gallery.
Pendleton's selected Solo Exhibitions include: Adam Pendleton: Selected Works, Shane Campbell
Gallery, Chicago and Adam Pendleton, Pace
Gallery, New York (2014); Adam Pendleton: I'll Be Your, Pace
London, (2012); Adam Pendleton: New Black Dada Paintings, Galeria Pedro Cera, Lisbon, (2012); Adam Pendleton: BAND, The Kitchen, New York; Adam Pendleton: EL T D K Amsterdam, Part I: three
scenes, Kunstverein, Amsterdam, (2009); Part III: BAND, de Appel Arts Center, Amsterdam, (2009); Adam Pendleton: EL T D K, Haunch of Venison, Berlin, (2009); Adam Pendleton: Rendered in Black, Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art, Indiana, (2008) and Rhona Hoffman
Gallery, Chicago, (2007); Adam Pendleton: Deeper Down There, Yvon Lambert, New York, (2005); Adam Pendleton: Being Here, Wallspace
Gallery, New York, (2004).
From 14th - 18th September 2016, the fair focuses on emerging artists and new art
scenes with 70
galleries taking part from cities that range from
London to Seoul, Buenos Aires to Cape Town.
In
London, don't miss Mayfair Art Weekend from 30 June — 2 July, which highlights the thriving
gallery scene in this historic part of the capital.
Kumi Contemporary is a
London based Contemporary Japanese Art
gallery, presenting works of art by the most exciting and innovative names in the Japanese art
scene.
Hosting national and international project spaces,
galleries and residencies, Enclave forms a major part of a new masterplan for Deptford, South
London and a major new addition to the art
scene locally.
In acknowledgement of the important role arts organisations outside of
London play within the UK cultural
scene, a different regional organisation joins the collective each year, with Focal Point
Gallery presenting a selection of their editions (Hilary Lloyd, Bridget Smith, Benedict Drew, Hannah Sawmill, Volker Eichelmann, Scott King and Keith Farquhar, Dawn Mellor, Clunie Reid, Milly Thompson, David Mabb) at the stand in 2017.
The
gallery that put Carsten Höller's swirling silver slides on the outside of its building (and inside hosted retrospectives of work by David Shrigley, Tracey Emin and Ana Mendieta among others) will be at the heart of
London's contemporary art
scene once more.
As the RA prepares for a major exhibition of Russian art, we go behind the
scenes at Moscow's State Tretyakov
Gallery to discover a seldom - seen painting that will be making the trip to
London.
The artist's profile has been quietly gathering momentum; and an all new show at
London's bombastic Halcyon
Gallery last September, is helping him to smash the UK's art
scene.
Lyndesy Ingram
gallery,
London, hosts a new show featuring polaroids collected over two decades from behind the
scenes of Miles Aldridge's fashion shoots.
Number 16 also takes a look at the
London Art
Scene, where a lot of local
galleries showed their program at
London Art Fair, and Hauser & Wirth opened new spaces with a Martin Creed solo exhibition that featured a dangerously revolving neon sculpture.
Her work has been also shown at Found, Hockney
Gallery,
London; HAUT
scene, Copenhagen, Denmark; Schwartz
Gallery,
London; Offprint
London, Tate Modern,
London, 2015.
2012 T.G. Rosenthal, Paula Rego: The Complete Graphics Work, Thames & Hudson,
London 2008 John McEwen, Paula Rego: Behind the
Scenes, Phaidon,
London 2007 Marco Livingstone, Paula Rego, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid ** 2003 ** Maria Manuel Lisboa, Paula Rego's Map of Memory: National and Sexual Politics, Ashgate Publishing Ltd., Hampshire 2002 Fiona Bradley, Paula Rego, Tate Publishing,
London 1999 Ruth Rosengarten, Getting Away with Murder — Paula Rego and the Crime of Father Amaro, Delos Press, Birmingham 1997 Paula Rego, Tate
Gallery Publications,
London 1992, 1996, 2007, John McEwen, Paula Rego, Phaidon Press Ltd,
London
Michael Werner
gallery,
London In these grave and noble paintings of our catastrophic age, the Scottish artist uses lurid colours to create bold beach
scenes haunted by murders and mangy lions
1961 New New York
Scene, Marlborough Fine Art Ltd., Carnegie International,
London, England The Art of Assemblage, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY Paintings and Sculpture, Cordier and Warren
Gallery, New York, NY Contemporary Paintings Selected from 1960 - 61 New York
Gallery, Yale University Art
Gallery, New Haven, CT
There is perhaps no greater indicator of changing tastes in
London's contemporary art
scene and the West's hunger for fresh cultural and artistic influences than the masses of people who came to witness the «Korean Eye: Moon Generation» Exhibition, which showcases the finest contemporary Korean art at the renowned Saatchi
Gallery in
London.
Stefania Bortolami has been part of New York's art
scene for years: first, as an artist liaison for Larry Gagosian — after a successful stint with the legendary
London dealer Anthony d'Offay; then co-owning a Chelsea
gallery with Amalia Dayan and finally, on her own, as the founder of an eponymous
gallery five blocks down the street from the previous space.
Jonny Davies, director at Flowers
Gallery, which has spaces in New York and
London, explained his decision to participate in this years fair came down to his faith in its new director, the
London based Iranian curator and collector, Kamiar Maleki, as well as the current buzz around Istanbul's art
scene.
Pippa runs ArtDog
London, a
London - based
gallery mainly representing
London artists, active in the pop - up
gallery scene and in collaborations with other
galleries.
Taylor says the
gallery «will capture the spirit of the
London programme, but apply that vision to the hub of the New York art
scene.
With an excellent programme of
galleries and an inspired series of talks Art13 is set to become a huge player in the
London art fair
scene.
One of its effects was to set an example of artist - as - curator — in the mid-1990s artist - run exhibition spaces and
galleries became a feature of the
London arts
scene.
During my degrees I discovered that
London has the most vibrant
gallery scene in the world, with commercial
galleries spread out all over the city.
A Whitechapel
Gallery exhibition that offers a unique insight into the development of the British art
scene of the 90s, opening soon in
London.
The Victorian building has been boarded up for the past two years, but now it's back, after a # 13m facelift, and the result is a stylish space more in keeping with a
gallery at the centre of
London's art
scene.
Coinciding with the republishing of Who is Sleeping on My Pillow, a 2009 collaboration with his wife Karin Mamma Andersson, Nordström's latest solo exhibition, For the Insects and the Hounds, showing at the David Zwirner
Gallery,
London, introduces horsemen, hounds, ghosts, Grecian and suburban Swedish architecture, humanised wolves, gothic madonnas and barefaced
scenes of a pornographic level.
Nigel Hurst: The
London contemporary art
scene certainly, when I joined the
gallery, was still quite parochial.
With around 1,500
galleries, current
London art
scene is one of the world's biggest, with a reach that rivals, and arguably exceeds, hubs like New York and Paris.
In which artists,
galleries and artworks are proposed and selected by curators and museum directors, including some of the leading figures in the international
scene: Silvia Fanti (Performative Arts Curator, Xing, Bologna), Agustin Pérez Rubi (Artistic Director, Malba — Fundación Costantin, Buenos Aires), Stephanie Rosenthal (Head Curator, Hayward
Gallery,
London, and Artistic Director).
We work with organisations and other
galleries, both from the UK and around the globe, in order to bring fresh talent to
London's contemporary art
scene.
Not only that, I was happy to help shortlist a Turner Prize exhibition that was to be shown in Hull, a city geographically and socially distant from
London's museums and
gallery scene.
Selected recent performances, exhibitions, and film screenings include: Weddings and Babies, Pilar Corrias
Gallery,
London (2017); The Next Step, Two Queens, Leicester (2016); Alice Theobald and Atomik Architecture, BALTIC Ryder Commission, BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead (2016); You've got my back and I'm on your side, FRAC Champagne - Ardenne, Reims (2016); The boys the girls and the political, Lisson
Gallery,
London (2015); The Fifth Artist, Wysing Arts Centre, Cambridge (2015);
Scene Four: Home, Flat Time House,
London (2015); Dear Luxembourg (yours, bucktoothed grl), Nosbaum Reding Projects, Luxembourg (2015); Marmalade Me, South
London Gallery,
London (2014); I've said yes now, that's it., Outpost, Norwich (2014) and Chisenhale
Gallery,
London (2014); AFTER / HOURS / DROP / BOX, Modern Art Oxford, Oxford (2013) and Spike Island, Bristol (2014); Young
London, V22,
London (2013); They Keep Putting Words In My Mouth!
2015 Twentieth Anniversary Exhibition, Stephen Friedman
Gallery,
London, England 56th International Art Exhibition - All the World's Futures, Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy Invitation to Travel, Central for Contemporary Art, Brussels, Belgium Atopolis, Mons 2015, Mons, Belgium Selections from the Permanent Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, USA
Scenes for a New Heritage: Contemporary Art from the Collection, Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA Art Station Dubulti, Riga, Latvia Under the Clouds, Serralves Museum, Porto, Portugal Jaffa Port, Tel Aviv, Israel Fotofestival, Manheim - Ludwigshafen - Heidelberg, Germany True Story, Proyectos Monclova, Mexico City, Mexico Reasonable Sized Paintings, Mana Contemporary, Jersey City, USA
Major group shows include; «56th International Art Exhibition - All the World's Futures», Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy (2015); «
Scenes for a New Heritage: Contemporary Art from the Collection», Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA (2015); «Under the Clouds», Serralves Museum, Porto, Portugal (2015); «MANIFESTA 10, The European Biennial of Contemporary Art», Saint - Petersburg, Russia (2014); «The Human Factor», Hayward
Gallery,
London, England (2014); «1984 - 1999.
The exhibition which will feature both works on loan and for sale — is a collaboration between Sotheby's Modern & Post-War British Art department and the legendary Sixties dealer Kasmin, whose
gallery at 118 New Bond Street (just up the road from Sotheby's) was the first «white cube» space in
London and the
scene of many ground - breaking shows, including Hockney's first major solo exhibition at the end of 1963.
The
London organizations Whitechapel
Gallery, Studio Voltaire, Camden Arts Center and the Institute of Contemporary Arts are partnering with New York's Artists Space, the Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College, SculptureCenter and Swiss Institute, a fixture of New York's contemporary art
scene.
His understanding of the commercial
gallery scene in
London, its internal dynamics and the forces driving meaningful change at the younger and mid-tier levels, is incomplete.